After property has been repossessed
A warrant of possession is executed on the date and time stated in the warrant. A bailiff comes to the property accompanied by a locksmith and a representative from the lender. The bailiff may use force to enter the property and evict all the occupants. If opposition is expected, the bailiff may be accompanied by a police officer to prevent a breach of the peace (not to enforce the eviction). The locksmith changes the locks. Any of the client’s property left in the home will therefore be locked inside. The client can ask the lender for access to the home to remove her/his property within a reasonable period, usually two weeks.
Once a warrant has been executed, the court cannot suspend the possession unless:
•the original possession order itself is set aside; or
•the warrant has been obtained by fraud; or
•there has been oppression or abuse of process in its execution. Court staff providing misleading information could amount to ’oppression’, but unless there has been ’fault’ on the part of the lender or the court, there is no abuse of process.1Cheltenham and Gloucester Building Society v Obi [1996] 28 HLR 22 (Adviser 65 abstracts). Where the lender executed a warrant of possession after the borrower had telephoned it and paid off the arrears as arranged, the court set aside the warrant as an abuse of process: Blemain Finance v Ridley, Darlington County Court, 2012, unreported (Adviser 155 abstracts).
The property is then sold by the lender (called the ‘mortgagee in possession’), which has the following responsibilities.
•The lender must take proper care of the property. This includes making essential or emergency repairs (eg, mending a leaking pipe) and may include simple maintenance (eg, mowing the lawn, painting the windows), but not include improvements – eg, refitting the kitchen.
•The lender must sell the property at the best price reasonably possible. If it does not do so, the client can complain to the Financial Ombudsman Service.2See for example, ‘Complaint Relating to Possession of a Property - and its Subsequent Sale Below Market Value’, Ombudsman News 103/11, June/July 2012 Most lenders get at least two valuations to ensure the price is fair and sell through an estate agent in the usual way. Sale by auction is usually considered to achieve a fair market price, although a reserve price is set. •The lender should sell the property as soon as possible. The lender is not under an obligation to delay the sale in the hope of obtaining a better price. The lender must balance the need to prevent the debt increasing with market factors.
•The lender must account to the client for money received and charged in respect of the property (see below).3See A Walker, ‘Movin’ On - the mortgagee in possession’, Quarterly Account 50, IMA
After the sale of the property, the lender balances the payments and proceeds of the sale against the outstanding mortgage (the ’account’). The sale proceeds are applied first to any arrears of interest and are usually sufficient to cover these, so that any shortfall is likely to consist of the capital borrowed.
If the mortgage is less than the payments and proceeds of sale, the balance should be paid to the client as soon as reasonably possible. If the mortgage is more than the payments and proceeds, the client should be informed as soon as possible and asked to make up the difference, usually referred to as a ’mortgage shortfall’ debt.4For a full discussion of this issue, see D McConnell, ‘No Equity?’, Adviser 53 In order to recover any debt, the lender must produce an account to show all payments made and proceeds of the sale versus the amount of the mortgage and its other costs to show the balance outstanding.
The client is legally obliged to repay the mortgage and all the costs associated with recovering the debt. Once the property has been sold, the shortfall debt is unsecured. Although the lender should inform the client of the amount of the shortfall as soon as possible after the sale, inevitably the client will have moved and, in the absence of a forwarding address, it may take some time to trace her/him. It is not unusual for people to remain unaware of the shortfall debt for several years.
To lose a home is not necessarily the end of the line for a client. Many lenders do not take any action immediately following a forced sale because they recognise the client is likely to have financial problems that caused the arrears and therefore could not afford to pay anything anyway. However, many lenders keep records of repossessed borrowers and are likely to attempt to recover any shortfall at a later date when either her/his situation is known to have improved or the general economic situation is better. It is also possible that such lenders could sell these debts at a later date to companies whose standards of collection are more draconian than those of the original mortgage lender. If the lender decides to recover the shortfall from the client, it must inform her/him of this decision within six years of the date of sale.
It is, therefore, vital to advise a client whose home is sold by a secured lender that there may be future attempts by the lender to recover this money.
For more details on dealing with mortgage shortfall debts, see here.